Quito weather by month — averages, rainfall & climate trends
Ecuador's capital sits on the equator but nearly three kilometres up, a combination that hands it eternal spring by day and a fierce, high-altitude sun overhead. Average temperatures and rainfall by month, a climate graph, today's conditions versus the long-term average, and how the climate has shifted since 1940 — all on one page for Quito, Ecuador.
Today vs average
+2.6°Cwarmer than usual
How it’s changed
Right now
What it's doing today vs the historical average for this date.Right now
15.8°
On this date — July 19
Warmer than usual · 2.6°C above the average high
- Record high: 21.6° · 2006
- Record low: 6.1° · 1961
- One year ago: 17.9°
Every July 19 in history — coldest to hottest
Dots show daily highs (top) and lows (bottom) for each July 19 on record (n = 87). Outlined dots are today's forecast.
Area we sample
Each city's history comes from one ERA5 grid cell — about 28 km across, shown by the dashed box. Near mountains or coasts, conditions can vary across the cell.
Location & data
Historical weather for Quito is sampled from the ECMWF ERA5 reanalysis at 0.23°S, 78.52°W, with daily records since 1940.
- Coordinates
- 0.23°S, 78.52°W
- Time zone
- America/Guayaquil
- Period
- 1940–2026
- Data source
- ERA5 (ECMWF)
Last 30 days
31 of the last 31 days were warmer than the historical average for that date. Average difference: +2.1°C.
Each bar is one day, from morning low to afternoon high. Warm-colored bars are days whose mean ran above average; cool bars ran below. The dot inside the bar is the daily mean. The shaded band is the typical 10–90% range expected for that date. Average = the day's mean temperature averaged across every year of record (1940–2026) for that calendar date.
This date over the years
One dot per year — the mean temperature on this calendar date. Dots are warmer or cooler than the long-term average (dashed line); the shaded band is the typical 10–90% range, and the highlighted dot is today's forecast. Based on ERA5 reanalysis — modelled estimates, not station readings.
Weather by month
Average temperatures and rainfall for each month — what a typical year looks like, from the full record.Climate overview
Quito lies high in the Andes of northern Ecuador, at around 2,850 metres and almost exactly on the equator. The two pull against each other: the equatorial latitude would suggest heat, yet the altitude keeps temperatures mild and almost unvarying, a subtropical highland climate (Köppen Cfb) often described as eternal spring. Days are warm, nights cool, and the figures barely shift from one month to the next.
What changes through the year is rain, not temperature. A drier stretch from June to August, known locally as summer, alternates with a longer wet season across the rest of the year. The thin equatorial air also lets through some of the most intense solar radiation found anywhere on Earth, with midday ultraviolet levels that can climb to extraordinary heights under a clear sky.
The year peaks in August, at 12.7°C over the day and around 17.7°C by mid-afternoon. At the other extreme, November averages 11.9°C, with typical overnight lows of 9.0°C. Frost is essentially unknown.
In total, Quito averages about 2964 mm of precipitation a year; April is usually the wettest month (326 mm) and July the driest (124 mm).
Comparing the record's first decade with its most recent one, Quito now averages 2.0°C warmer than it did in the 1940s. The year-by-year charts above trace that shift in detail.
Climate graph (climograph)
August is the warmest month, November the coolest — a yearly swing of 1°C. Wettest month: April (~326 mm). Whole year averages ~2964 mm of rain.
Bars = average monthly rainfall (right axis). Lines = average daily high and low (left axis). Average = each month's value averaged across every year of record (1940–2026).
Monthly wind
Average daily peak wind at 10 m, by month.
Monthly solar energy
Average daily incoming solar energy in megajoules per square metre — a measured proxy for how sunny the month is.
Quito month by month — what to expect
Typical conditions for each month, averaged across the full record (since 1940). Daylight is the time from sunrise to sunset. Record high/low are the most extreme values in the ERA5 dataset (modelled since 1940), so they can differ from official weather-station readings.
| Month | Avg high | Avg low | Rain | Daylight | Record high | Record low |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | 16.2° | 9.3° | 287 mm | 12.0 h | 21.9° (2020) | 4.2° (2017) |
| February | 16.2° | 9.3° | 276 mm | 12.0 h | 22.1° (1998) | 4.1° (1944) |
| March | 16.3° | 9.4° | 313 mm | 12.0 h | 21.3° (2010) | 3.9° (1974) |
| April | 16.5° | 9.5° | 326 mm | 12.0 h | 21.3° (2016) | 2.9° (1968) |
| May | 16.8° | 9.5° | 268 mm | 12.0 h | 22.1° (2024) | 2.9° (1951) |
| June | 17.0° | 9.3° | 173 mm | 12.0 h | 22.4° (2024) | 4.8° (1967) |
| July | 17.3° | 9.0° | 124 mm | 12.0 h | 21.8° (2015) | 4.2° (2007) |
| August | 17.7° | 9.0° | 144 mm | 12.0 h | 22.4° (2023) | 4.2° (1978) |
| September | 17.6° | 9.1° | 215 mm | 12.0 h | 22.2° (2005) | 4.0° (1974) |
| October | 16.7° | 9.1° | 281 mm | 12.0 h | 22.5° (2001) | 0.2° (1947) |
| November | 16.3° | 9.0° | 269 mm | 12.0 h | 20.8° (2024) | 1.9° (1954) |
| December | 16.2° | 9.3° | 288 mm | 12.0 h | 23.1° (2015) | 2.4° (2007) |
How it has changed
Year-by-year signals from 1940 to today.Climate stripes
Annual mean shifted from 1940–1949 to 2016–2025 by +2.0°C.
Each vertical stripe is one year. Color encodes how much that year's annual mean differed from the long-term average. Average = each year's annual mean compared to the average of all years (1940–2026). cooler ← → warmer
Annual mean temperature
Long-term trend: +0.26°C per decade.
One point per year — the temperature averaged across the whole year. The dashed line is the least-squares long-term trend. Based on ERA5 reanalysis — modelled estimates, not station readings.
Seasonal warming
Dec–Feb is warming fastest: +0.28°C per decade.
Each faint line is one three-month period's average per year; the bold dashed line is its long-term trend. Different parts of the year often warm at different rates. Based on ERA5 reanalysis — modelled estimates, not station readings.
Hot days vs frost days
Days ≥ 25°C per year: 0.0 early in the record → 0.0 recently. Frost days: 0 → 0.
Thin lines are raw yearly counts; thick lines are the smoothed trend that removes year-to-year noise. The hot-day threshold is auto-picked per city so the line actually moves. Average = a centered 5-year rolling average to smooth weather noise.
Yearly hot & cold extremes
All-time high in 2015, all-time low in 1947: 23.1°C / 0.2°C.
One point per year — the single hottest and coldest day recorded that year.
Annual rainfall
~2964 mm/year on average. Last decade ran +8% vs that average. Long-term trend: +7 mm per decade.
One bar per year of total rainfall. Dashed line is the long-term average. Average = the average annual rainfall across every year of record (1940–2026).
Day-by-day grid
Each tiny square is one calendar day across the full record — ~30,000 days per city. Use the mode switch above the chart: Anomaly colors each day by how far it ran from the historical average for that date (red = warmer, blue = cooler), Daily mean temp shows the absolute mean temperature for the day (useful to see seasons and heatwaves), and Precipitation shows daily rainfall (useful to spot wet/dry seasons and droughts). Average = the long-term average for that calendar date (1940–2026).